The exterior of Lara Croft ’s (Angelina Jolie) mansion is Hatfield House, Hatfield, north of London, a frequent location, seen as the interior of ‘Wayne Manor’ in Tim Burtons Batman, though the lavish interior, where she practises her bungee ballet, is a studio set.

The London home of villainous lawyer Manfred (Iain Glen), until recently the vast and elaborate office of insurance company Willis Faber, 10 Trinity Square (formerly the Port of London Authority building), looming over Trinity Square Garden, EC3, near the Tower of London. It’s now being converted into a five-star hotel, private members’s club and private residences. The building featured in the 1960 Peter Sellers comedy caper Two Way Stretch; in 1976, it became a suitably grand venue for the ‘Oil Producers International Conference’ at the opening of Sweeney!; and in 2012, it was moved to ‘Whitehall’ to become a government building in Skyfall.

The exotic interior, with its Indian-style carvings, is Elveden Hall, a private house on the A11 about four miles west of Thetford in Suffolk, which you might recognise as the site of the eerie orgy in Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut, and as the ‘Tangier’ banquet in Bond movie The Living Daylights.

The Cambodian temple complex, where Croft must retrieve the half of the triangular MacGuffin, is at Siem Reap in Cambodia, where she arrives, with game-style ease, onto Phnom Bakheng, a hill topped by a Hindu temple (though the site later became a Buddhist centre).

She tools up and scoots off in her Land Rover in front of the sacred Bayon Temple, in Angkor Thom, its 54 towers, each bearing four enigmatic smiling faces. The most spectacular temple of all, entwined with enormous trees, where Croft encounters the mysterious girl, is Ta Prohm.

The most famous, Angkor Wat itself (the largest religious monument in the world and a World Heritage site), looms over the Cambodian village. It appears to be on a river It’s not. The village was no more than a set built around a small ornamental pond.

As Cambodia recovers from its troubled past, a modest tourism industry is beginning to blossom, learning to balance economic gain with inevitable concerns about the effect on the ancient buildings. There’s no public transport between the monuments, so check for guided tours.

The 1965 film of Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, with Peter O’Toole, is one of the few other films to be shot at Angkor Wat.

Lara boards the ’copter for ‘Siberia’ at RAF Odiham, in north Hampshire. It’s not a terribly long flight – the arrival was filmed on Salisbury Plain also in Hampshire (it’s costly to fly ’copters out to Iceland, which was standing in for ‘Siberia’.

The 'Siberian' location is Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon, formed by the retreating Vatnajokull glacier – the largest in Europe – on the southeast coast of the country, about 40 miles east of Skaftafell National Park and 250 miles from Reykjavik. It's the same glacier seen in Bond movie Die Another Day, and about 20 miles east of icy landscapes seen in Christopher Nolan's Interstellar.

Another bit of British fakery has Windsor Great Park, Berkshire, briefly standing in for the steamy 'Cambodian jungle' as Lara sprints through the undergrowth.